Lindsay Davenport

2016 CALIFORNIA SPORTS HALL OF FAME INDUCTEE

Lindsay Ann Davenport was ranked No. 1 in the world for 98 weeks and a year-end No. 1 four times in 1998, 2001, 2004, and 2005, she may be the most unassuming and unabashed champion among the enshrinees in Newport. Since 1975, the modest Davenport is one of only five female players who have ended the year ranked No. 1 in the world, joining an illustrious list featuring Chris Evert, Steffi Graf, Martina Navratilova, and Serena Williams.

Davenport who won three major singles titles (was a finalist in four others) and three major doubles championships (was a finalist in 10 others). In a career that spanned 17 years, from 1993 to 2010, Davenport won the 1996 Olympic Gold Medal and earned 55 singles and 38 doubles championships. Her 55 singles titles are tied with Virginia Wade for seventh best in the Open era. On February 22, 2006, she became just the eighth female player in Women’s Tennis Association history to win 700 matches, doing so by defeating Elena Likhovtseva in the second round of the Dubai Tournament, 6-0, 6-0. She finished her career 753-194 in singles and 387-116 in doubles. At her induction ceremony, Chris Evert described the 6-foot-3 Davenport’s game as being “so loud, so strong, and aggressive.”

Davenport was a power baseliner. She built her game on a crushing forehand, deep and hard-to-handle. Her two-handed backhand was compact and clean, an often overlooked weapon – she could hit uncontested winners from that side as competently as her forehand. Davenport’s court placement was superb; shots hit into the corner were usually outright winners or defensive returns that she would follow to net and emphatically put away. Her height helped enhance a powerful flat serve that she placed anywhere in the service box. “Hitting the ball was always something that came very natural to me,” Davenport said in her induction acceptance speech on July 14, 2014. “It happened at a young age … It took me a very long time to put that together, probably 20 years after I first started playing. But that’s what made it so fun, was the sound, what I could do with the shots, see how hard I could hit them.”

Davenport won the Gold Medal at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, defeating fellow Hall of Famer Arantxa Sánchez-Vicario, 7-6, 6-2. She played on the U.S. Fed Cup team for ten years (1993-2000, 2002, 2005, 2008), leading the Americans to titles in 1996, 1999, and 2000. Davenport compiled a 26-3 record in singles and a 7-0 mark in doubles.

At her 2014 induction ceremony in Newport, fellow classmate Jane Brown Grimes said, “She has meant a lot to women’s tennis. I consider her the quintessential power tennis for women’s tennis. She led the pack in changing the game … Also for U.S. tennis she was the American girl, the girl next door and always very humble. For me, she has been an absolute paragon and I hope there’s another Lindsay Davenport out there coming along because she’s done a tremendous amount for American tennis and women’s tennis.”

Davenport has extended her career in tennis post-retirement, working as a coach and currently as a broadcaster for Tennis Channel.